Here we go again. I am back on the Huel, joined the gym and trying to eat more healthily. Down a stone already in just two months so something is working. Perhaps the addition of therapy has something to do with it.

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@fatbastad
Here we go again. I am back on the Huel, joined the gym and trying to eat more healthily. Down a stone already in just two months so something is working. Perhaps the addition of therapy has something to do with it.
Apologies for the format and need to zoom, but I thought this response was wonderful
Image is a picture of page 42 from The Sunday Times in the UK (undated). The page is called Style Voice, and the segment is called Dear Dolly, subtitled: “your love, life and friendship dilemmas answered by Dolly Alderton.” At the bottom of the page, there is a note that says “To get your life dilemma answered by Dolly, email or send a voice note to [email protected] or DM @theststyle.
Text of the segment reads:
[submission]
Dear Dolly,
I was already a little overweight, but things spiralled during lockdown. As a home-schooling, working-from-home single parent to two children, there was little time for contemplative yoga or solo mini-marathons around the park. After contracting the virus (it dragged on and on) and then not being able to leave our tiny flat much due to the lockdown, the only excitement of the day seemed to be a gin and tonic at 6pm, rounds of Netflix and peanut butter on toast.
I eat when I’m stressed and when I’m bored, and I was very stressed and very bored. And now the buttons are popping off my jeans. My clothes don’t fit, I don’t want to spend a fortune buying pretty new things in “L” when I have to get back to “M.” And how will I ever feel glamorous and attractive again after piling on the pounds and covering my face with a mask? Please help. I don’t want to be single for ever.
[response]
As I read your letter, the first thing I thought was what a challenging time you’ve been through in the past six months. You’ve had to educate, entertain and care for not one but two young children, all day, every day, without the help of a partner, while being mostly confined indoors in a tiny living space. You contracted an illness that was largely unknown and potentially debilitating. All this happened during a time when you couldn’t see friends or extended family, or go to the pub, or go away, or go anywhere for that matter. I want you to read that back and acknowledge what a difficult set of circumstances you’ve been living through recently.
With that in mind, I’m going to present you with a possibility: you haven’t overindulged at all. You haven’t eaten too much, you haven’t messed up a routine. You have been giving yourself exactly what you’ve needed in a time of immense stress – you have been in complete communion with your mind and body. You’ve allowed yourself the gentle anesthesia of a cold gin and tonic after a long day with kids, and restful nights with a comforting and familiar food as you prepare for the following morning. You’ve used your few spare hours to recuperate, instead of flinging yourself around your small flat in front of a YouTube exercise video or making complicated kale salads. All of this makes complete sense. You have not made any mistakes.
A clever thing the diet industry did to the collective consciousness is attach morals to eating: certain foods are bad (peanut butter on toast), certain ways of eating are bad (in front of Netflix). And if we are to believe the fallacy of “you are what you eat,” every time we put food in our mouths, we give ourselves permission to rate our morality. But our chosen meals aren’t proof of our goodness or badness. Deprivation or hyper-control doesn’t equate to health and virtue, appetite isn’t something feral and dangerous to be disciplined. Food is an inanimate object that we can use as we like – to nourish, energize or comfort. How we eat will always be in flux depending on our circumstances, whether that be emotional or physical.
I think the best thing you can do is acquaint yourself with the idea of intuitive eating. It’s a seemingly simple concept that many of us have to relearn at some point in our lives. Intuitive eating is about tuning in to your body, listening to what it wants and responding compassionately. It’s about quietening the chatter you’ve been absorbing your whole life – all the contradictory rules and convoluted calorie counting – and instead focusing on the requirements of your appetite and tastes. We are all born with an innate ability to do this (you never see a toddler leaving 20 per cent of its meal on a plate because it read an article saying this is what French women do), but tragically it is a skill that is stolen from so many of us.
Because another clever thing the diet industry did was make us believe that our instincts are wrong, that if we ate what we want when we wanted it, we’d live off a mountain of éclairs, a river of Baileys and nothing else. That’s just not true. If you can find a way to eat intuitively, without any cycles of restriction and reward, your body will find its way to the weight where it is naturally most comfortable.
And if all that fails, try this: every time you go to feed yourself, imagine that you are feeding one of your children. Every time you finish a meal and you want to berate yourself for the decisions you made: imagine you are speaking to one of your children. If they came to you – tired, anxious or ill – would you give them a calorie-counted meal, or would you give them what they were craving? If they ate something that brought them joy, would you remind them afterwards that they could have eaten something that was less pleasurable but lower in fat? Would you tell them to take notice of the letter on the label in their clothes and attach a sense of self-worth to it? Would you let them believe that the letter on that label was an indicator of whether someone will fall in love with them?
The sad truth is women are conditioned to feel like physical failures if they don’t conform to an impossible specification, so the language of self-hatred is easily accessible to us. I don’t want to pretend that this propaganda isn’t incredibly powerful, and I don’t want you to feel even more self-hatred for taking it on and believing it. So, for now, try a trick instead: imagine you are your own child and care for yourself accordingly. That might be the only way you’ll allow yourself the logic and kindness you deserve.
This made me cry.
What fabulous advice this is. Ye gads.
He destroyed him
Putting protein powder on my cereal is absolutely not weird.
Had a few ups and downs lately. But today marks the day that I lost a stone!
Photon based foods are great if you just want a light meal.
I can officially say, that I have lost all my quarantine weight. I am back down to my pre-pandemic weight. Still miles to go before I rest. Hoping to lose 3 stone by Christmas. Wish me luck!
Intermittent Fasting (18:6) seems to be doing the job. I am down 4lbs in three weeks. That’s not bad going. I’ve been sticking to weight lifting three times a week, supported by Huel Protein, and breaking my fast with Black Huel, followed by a healthy dinner during my 6 hour eating window. Drinking lots of water. I also bought an exercise bike, and so far have done 30 minutes of cardio every day. I’ve noticed that though I have lost weight and about a cm from around my waist, I have also gained noticeable muscle mass in my arms, shoulders and back.
Most importantly, feels sustainable. There is less meal prep (when on slimming world I spent almost all my down time prepping meals, so much so that I had much less time for exercise.) and as I work from home now, I have more spare time to focus on my fitness. Also, it is reduced my food spending budget. Who’d have thunk 😆
Feeling good today!
Trying out Huel Protein powder. Having one scoop (105cals 20g protein) with a lot of water during my strength workouts. Still sticking with intermittent fasting in the morning and Huel Black for lunch (57g 250 cals). I’m trying to sway my macros towards protein and away from carbs. Not that carbs are bad for you, but the latest pseudo science diet rubbish seems to indicate that some body shapes metabolise carbs better than others, and what a surprise mine is on the bad end of the spectrum. 🤷🏻
Also I am keen to start building muscle, as you know I’ve been doing strength workouts since January and my I am now reaching a level where I need extra protein for muscle recovery. Hopefully I can shed some tummy fat and gain some back and arm muscles!
I’ve not posted for a long while. I think with everything going on in the world, and the fact I had to shield for covid meant any and all exercise and diet went out the window. I won’t make excuses 🤷🏻 but I’m back and ready to try again.
I hate New Years resolutions, I think setting yourself unrealistic goals and stressing out about it for all of January is essentially setting yourself up for failure. That said, I felt like a new year meant turning over a new leaf. Rather than making a vague resolution of “get fit” I decided to make slow life style changes that I can ramp up over time. I began with two ten minute stretch training sessions a week. Over the course of the month those got bumped up to twenty minutes. Ii didn’t miss a single session.
Today I decided to add a 45 minute cardio session to my week. I started with some light boxersise. It was fun but challenging and I hope of I can keep it in my schedule for a few weeks I’ll add a second session later in the month.
I feeling totally jazzed but also exhausted now so time for a shower and a nap. Maybe not in that order.
Zombie Run 5k Week1
Successfully kept to the IF every day this week. I started with three last week. I fast 20 hours on, 4 hours off, and break my fast with a Huel at 4pm and then eat whatever at 7pm. I also did my first yoga session today. I haven’t been working out this week. I felt a bit unwell at the start of the week but starting to get back energy back now and I’ve always wanted to try yoga. Anyhow, I’ve not weighed myself but my face is already looking less chubby so I guess at very least I’ve moved some water retention. Feeling strong!
I managed 18 hours of fasting yesterday. Today I’m swinging for 20 hours. I’m still tracking calories, to be sure I don’t over indulge in the post fast frenzy. I notice that yesterday I really didn’t feel properly hungry until about 2pm. Drinking black coffee helps.
It’s an interesting experience. Spreading 1600 calories out over three meals and maybe two snacks leaves me feeling generally unsatisfied and hungry all day. But when I don’t eat in the morning, I don’t feel hungry until mid afternoon, and then when my fast breaks I can have a bigger more fulfilling meal.
The plan is to break my fast at about 4pm with a 300 calories Huel drink, and then eat my usual evening meal about 7-8.
Well look at this. A new year and another attempt to lose weight. Since last posting I have tried Noom and didn’t like it. Seemed a super expensive calorie counting app.
I am now beginning the journey of Intermittent Fasting. Current weight: 23 stone 5lbs. Far too high. Lockdown is kicking my butt diet and exercise wise but I am determined to make something stick!
We are still using Mindful Chef for main meals, and Huel for other meals. I’ve not really lost weight doing this despite only eating an average of 1800 calories a day. I’m hoping Intermittent Fasting will help reset my metabolism, and kickstart my weight loss. I’ll keep you posted!
Our holiday to Wales has to be cancelled due to Covid, so hubby made me Welsh Rarebit to cheer me up!
This weeks meals were all a little bland, though still good! The Thai red curry (image 3) was the best but there was too much courgetti which perhaps diluted the flavour a bit. Still, very positive all around.
I’ve dropped 10lbs this week! Much like last week I assume much of this is water retention (and will go back on over the weekend). Still a downward trend is good! This week I switched from Original Huel to Black Huel. Black Huel has significantly less carbs and higher protein levels. It tastes more or less the same (I have the unflavoured & unsweetened versions taste is very neutral anyway) and I find I stay full for longer. I tend to work out before breakfast so it’s nice to know I’m getting an additional protein dump immediately afterwards.